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Libfile repository Content Cox Cox Introduction iternational relations 2012 Cox Introduction international relations 2012

Theoretical 
approach
Question
Realism
Example: What role did the distribution of power within the 
international system play in the collapse of Cold War bipolarity?
Liberalism
Constructivism
English School
The international system after the end of the Cold War 
As we have suggested throughout this course, the period from 1989 to 
1991 was one of incredible importance to IR. Like the three great crises 
of the twentieth century that gave birth to IR (see Chapter 1), the end of 
the Cold War was a transformational moment that changed international 
society – including the world economy – forever. Naturally, critics of this 
view argue that change is ever-present in world politics and that other 
events have been just as important in shaping international affairs. There 
is something to this argument. However, it is difficult to think of another 
event between 1947 and 1991 that has had the same impact on the world 
as the end of the Cold War. Certainly, none altered the balance of power 
and the structure of the international capitalist system in anything like 
the same way. The question is not whether the end of the Cold War was a 
critical juncture in the longer history of the twentieth century. It obviously 
was. Rather, we need to consider the impact it actually had. The best way 
to do this is to focus on what actually happened to specific countries and 
regions. 
Communism after Communism
The immediate consequences of the end of the Cold War were felt first in 
communist states and varied widely from place to place. Some communist 
governments simply collapsed, most obviously those which had been 
taken over by the USSR in the wake of the Second World War. These 
states, such as Poland and Hungary, reoriented their foreign policies 
westwards, in effect becoming part of the West through membership 
of NATO and the European Union (EU). Others followed a different 
trajectory. Yugoslavia descended into a bloody civil war. Fortunately, the 
breakup of the Soviet Union was comparatively peaceful, though conflicts 
did break out on its periphery, most notably in the Caucasus and parts of 
Central Asia. The experiences of the former Soviet republics have been 
mixed. The three Baltic states – Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania – managed 
to anchor themselves within the Western, democratic camp. Other states 
such as Belarus, Uzbekistan and Russia itself followed alternative paths. 


11 Introduction to international relations
46
The Russian Federation, which succeeded to the bulk of Soviet territory 
and population, is an especially interesting and important case. For a 
short while, it looked as if Russia was moving into the Western camp. 
With the election of President Vladimir Putin, however, it became clear 
that the transition in Russia was not moving in the direction originally 
mapped out for it by the West and its Russian allies. This will probably 
not lead to a ‘new’ Cold War as some have speculated. However, it has left 
Russia’s relationship with the West in a delicate state, subject to regular 
misunderstandings and always liable to veer out of control. 
Other communist states followed an even less predictable trajectory. Far 
from the end of the Cold War in Europe leading to the wholesale collapse 
of communist power around the world, some communist states stabilised 
and even widened their control over people and territory. This is most 
obviously true in China, where the communist party reasserted its control 
following the bloody suppression of protests in Tiananmen Square in 
1989. But it was also true in other states such as Cuba, Vietnam and North 
Korea where the grip of ruling parties has proved tenacious. This has had 
disturbing consequences in North Korea. Whereas China and Vietnam – 
and more recently Cuba – have progressively deepened their integration 
into global market by liberalising their economies, North Korea has sought 
security by developing its own nuclear arsenal as deterrence against 
international intervention. Thus, the end of the Cold War made North 
Korea more of a danger to the stability of the international system even 
while it opened space for the integration of other communist states into 
mainstream international society.

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